Chapter 2
The Financial
Market
Environment
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All rights reserved.
Objectives
•
Understand the role that financial institutions
play in managerial finance.
•
Contrast the functions of financial institutions
and financial markets.
•
Describe the differences between the capital
markets and the money markets.
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Objectives (cont.)
•
Explain the root causes of the 2008 financial
crisis and recession.
•
Understand the major regulations and
regulatory bodies that affect financial
institutions and markets.
•
Discuss business taxes and their importance in
financial decisions.
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Financial Institutions & Markets
Firms that require funds from external sources can obtain
them in three ways:
1. through a financial institution
2. through financial markets
3. through private placements
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Financial Institutions &
Markets: Financial Institutions
• Financial institutions are intermediaries that channel the
savings of individuals, businesses, and governments into
loans or investments.
• The key suppliers and demanders of funds are individuals,
businesses, and governments.
• In general, individuals are net suppliers of funds, while
businesses and governments are net demanders of funds.
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Commercial Banks, Investment Banks,
and the Shadow Banking System
• Commercial banks are institutions that provide savers
with a secure place to invest their funds and that offer
loans to individual and business borrowers.
• Investment banks are institutions that assist companies
in raising capital, advise firms on major transactions such
as mergers or financial restructurings, and engage in
trading and market making activities.
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Commercial Banks, Investment Banks,
and the Shadow Banking System (cont.)
• The Glass-Steagall Act was an act of Congress in 1933
that created the federal deposit insurance program and
separated the activities of commercial and investment
banks.
– Repealed in the late 1990s.
• The shadow banking system describes a group of
institutions that engage in lending activities, much like
traditional banks, but these institutions do not accept
deposits and are therefore not subject to the same
regulations as traditional banks.
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Financial Institutions &
Markets: Financial Markets
• Financial markets are forums in which suppliers of
funds and demanders of funds can transact business
directly.
• Transactions in short term marketable securities take
place in the money market while transactions in long-term
securities take place in the capital market.
• A private placement involves the sale of a new security
directly to an investor or group of investors.
• Most firms, however, raise money through a public
offering of securities, which is the sale of either bonds or
stocks to the general public.
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Financial Institutions & Markets:
Financial Markets (cont.)
• The primary market is the financial market in which
securities are initially issued; the only market in which the
issuer is directly involved in the transaction.
• Secondary markets are financial markets in which
preowned securities (those that are not new issues) are
traded.
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Flow of Funds
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The Money Market
• The money market is created by a financial relationship
between suppliers and demanders of short-term funds.
• Most money market transactions are made in marketable
securities which are short-term debt instruments, such as
U.S. Treasury bills, commercial paper, and negotiable
certificates of deposit issued by government, business,
and financial institutions, respectively.
• Investors generally consider marketable securities to be
among the least risky investments available.
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The Money Market (cont.)
• The international equivalent of the domestic (U.S.) money
market is the Eurocurrency market.
• The Eurocurrency market is a market for short-term bank
deposits denominated in U.S. dollars or other marketable
currencies.
• The Eurocurrency market has grown rapidly mainly
because it is unregulated and because it meets the needs
of international borrowers and lenders.
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The Capital Market
• The capital market is a market that enables suppliers and
demanders of long-term funds to make transactions.
• The key capital market securities are bonds (long-term
debt) and both common and preferred stock (equity, or
ownership).
– Bonds are long-term debt instruments used by businesses and
government to raise large sums of money, generally from a
diverse group of lenders.
– Common stock are units of ownership interest or equity in a
corporation.
– Preferred stock is a special form of ownership that has features
of both a bond and common stock.
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The Capital Market
Lakeview Industries, a major microprocessor manufacturer,
has issued a 9 percent coupon interest rate, 20-year bond
with a $1,000 par value that pays interest semiannually.
– Investors who buy this bond receive the contractual right to $90
annual interest (9% coupon interest rate  $1,000 par value)
distributed as $45 at the end of each 6 months (1/2  $90) for 20
years.
– Investors are also entitled to the $1,000 par value at the end of
year 20.
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Broker Markets and
Dealer Markets
Broker markets are securities exchanges on which the two
sides of a transaction, the buyer and seller, are brought
together to trade securities.
– Trading takes place on centralized trading floors.
– Examples include: NYSE Euronext, American Stock Exchange
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Broker Markets and
Dealer Markets (cont.)
Dealer markets are markets in which the buyer and seller
are not brought together directly but instead have their
orders executed by securities dealers that “make markets” in
the given security.
– The dealer market has no centralized trading floors. Instead, it is
made up of a large number of market makers who are linked
together via a mass-telecommunications network.
– The Nasdaq market is one example
As compensation for executing orders, market makers make
money on the spread (bid price – ask price).
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Matter of Fact
NYSE Euronext is the World’s Largest Stock Exchange
– According to the World Federation of Exchanges, NYSE
Euronext is the largest stock market in the world, as measured
by the total market value of securities listed on that market.
– NYSE Euronext has listed securities worth more than $11.8
trillion in the U.S. and $2.9 trillion in Europe.
– Next largest is the London Stock Exchange with securities
valued at £ 1.7 trillion, which is equivalent to $2.8 trillion given
the exchange rate between pounds and dollars prevailing at the
end of 2009.
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International Capital Markets
• In the Eurobond market, corporations and governments
typically issue bonds denominated in dollars and sell them
to investors located outside the United States.
• The foreign bond market is a market for bonds issued by
a foreign corporation or government that is denominated
in the investor’s home currency and sold in the investor’s
home market.
• The international equity market allows corporations to
sell blocks of shares to investors in a number of different
countries simultaneously.
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The Role of Capital Markets
• From a firm’s perspective, the role of capital markets is to be a
liquid market where firms can interact with investors in order to
obtain valuable external financing resources.
• From investors’ perspectives, the role of capital markets is to be an
efficient market that allocates funds to their most productive uses.
• An efficient market allocates funds to their most productive uses
as a result of competition among wealth-maximizing investors and
determines and publicizes prices that are believed to be close to
their true value.
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The Role of Capital Markets
(cont.)
• Advocates of behavioral finance, an emerging field that
blends ideas from finance and psychology, argue that
stock prices and prices of other securities can deviate
from their true values for extended periods.
• These people point to episodes such as the huge run up
and subsequent collapse of the prices of Internet stocks in
the late 1990s, or the failure of markets to accurately
assess the risk of mortgage-backed securities in the more
recent financial crisis, as examples of the principle that
stock prices sometimes can be wildly inaccurate measures
of value.
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The Financial Crisis: Financial
Institutions and Real Estate Finance
• Securitization is the process of pooling mortgages or
other types of loans and then selling claims or securities
against that pool in a secondary market.
• Mortgage-backed securities represent claims on the cash
flows generated by a pool of mortgages and can be
purchased by individual investors, pension funds, mutual
funds, or virtually any other investor.
• A primary risk associated with mortgage-back securities
is that homeowners may not be able to, or may choose not
to, repay their loans.
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The Financial Crisis: Falling Home
Prices and Delinquent Mortgages
Aug. 2011 Index. = 142.8 down 3.8% (1 yr.) for 20 Largest Markets in U.S.
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The Financial Crisis: Crisis of
Confidence in Banks
Financial stocks lost 12.4% in 2011*
* Source: Money Magazine, Nov. 2011
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Matter of Fact
Consolidation in the U.S. Banking Industry:
– The U.S. banking industry has been going through a long period of
consolidation.
– According to the FDIC, the number of commercial banks in the United States
declined from 11,463 in 1992 to 8,012 at the end of 2009, a decline of 30%.
Source: FDIC – http://www.fdic.gov
– The decline is concentrated among small, community banks which larger
institutions have been acquiring at a rapid pace.
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The Financial Crisis: Spillover
Effects and the Great Recession
• As banks came under intense financial pressure in 2008,
they tightened their lending standards and dramatically
reduced the quantity of loans they made.
• Corporations found that they could no longer raise money
in the money market, or could only do so at
extraordinarily high rates.
• As a consequence, businesses began to hoard cash and cut
back on expenditures, and economic activity contracted.
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Regulation of Financial Institutions and Markets:
Regulations Governing Financial Institutions
• The Glass-Steagall Act (1933) established the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) which provides insurance for
deposits at banks and monitors banks to ensure their safety and
soundness.
• The Glass-Steagall Act also prohibited institutions that took
deposits from engaging in activities such as securities underwriting
and trading, thereby effectively separating commercial banks from
investment banks.
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Regulation of Financial Institutions and Markets:
Regulations Governing Financial Institutions
• The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (1999) allows business
combinations (e.g. mergers) between commercial banks, investment
banks, and insurance companies, and thus permits these institutions
to compete in markets that prior regulations prohibited them from
entering.
• Some leaders have argued that Congress should reenact GlassSteagall, which would effectively mandate the breakup of large
financial conglomerates.
• Others have proposed the implementation of new regulations,
particularly on the large financial institutions that received the most
assistance from the government during the financial crisis.
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Regulation of Financial Institutions and Markets:
Regulations Governing Financial Markets
• The Securities Act of 1933 regulates the sale of securities to the
public via the primary market.
– Requires sellers of new securities to provide extensive disclosures to the
potential buyers of those securities.
• The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 regulates the trading of
securities such as stocks and bonds in the secondary market.
– Created the Securities Exchange Commission, which is the primary
government agency responsible for enforcing federal securities laws.
– Requires ongoing disclosure by companies whose securities trade in
secondary markets (e.g., 10-Q, 10-K).
– Imposes limits on the extent to which “insiders” can trade in their firm’s
securities.
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Business Taxes
• Both individuals and businesses must pay taxes on income.
• The income of sole proprietorships and partnerships is taxed as the
income of the individual owners, whereas corporate income is
subject to corporate taxes.
• Both individuals and businesses can earn two types of income—
ordinary income and capital gains income.
• Under current law, tax treatment of ordinary income and capital
gains income change frequently due frequently changing tax laws.
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Corporate Tax Rate Schedule
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Business Taxes:
Ordinary Income
Ordinary income is earned through the sale of a firm’s goods
or services and is taxed at the rates depicted in Table 2.1 on
the previous slide.
Example
Weber Manufacturing Inc. has before-tax earnings of $250,000.
Tax = $22,500 + [0.39  ($250,000 – $100,000)]
Tax = $22,500 + (0.39  $150,000)
Tax = $22,500 + $58,500 = $80,750
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Business Taxation: Marginal
versus Average Tax Rates
• A firm’s marginal tax rate represents the rate at which
additional income is taxed.
• The average tax rate is the firm’s taxes divided by
taxable income.
Example
What are Webster Manufacturing’s marginal and average tax
rates?
Marginal Tax Rate
= 39%
Average Tax Rate
= $80,750/$250,000 = 32.3%
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Business Taxation:
Interest and Dividend Income
• For corporations only, 70% of all dividend income
received from an investment in the stock of another
corporation in which the firm has less than 20%
ownership is excluded from taxation.
• This exclusion moderates the effect of double taxation,
which occurs when after-tax corporate earnings are
distributed as cash dividends to stockholders, who then
must pay personal taxes on the dividend amount.
• Unlike dividend income, all interest income received is
fully taxed.
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Business Taxation:
Tax-Deductible Expenses
• In calculating taxes, corporations may deduct operating
expenses and interest expense but not dividends paid.
• This creates a built-in tax advantage for using debt
financing as the following example will demonstrate.
Example
Two companies, Debt Co. and No Debt Co., both
expect in the coming year to have EBIT of $200,000.
During the year, Debt Co. will have to pay $30,000 in
interest expenses. No Debt Co. has no debt and will
pay not interest expenses.
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Business Taxation:
Tax-Deductible Expenses (cont.)
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Business Taxation:
Tax-Deductible Expenses (cont.)
• As the example shows, the use of debt financing can
increase cash flow and EPS, and decrease taxes paid.
• The tax deductibility of interest and other certain
expenses reduces their actual (after-tax) cost to the
profitable firm.
• It is the non-deductibility of dividends paid that results in
double taxation under the corporate form of organization.
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Business Taxation: Capital
Gains
• A capital gain is the amount by which the sale price of an
asset exceeds the asset’s purchase price.
• For corporations, capital gains are added to ordinary
income and taxed like ordinary income at the firm’s
marginal tax rate.
Example
Ross Company has just sold for $150,000 and asset
that was purchased 2 years ago for $125,000. Because
the asset was sold for more than its initial purchase
price, there is a capital gain of $25,000 ($150,000 $125,000).
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Chapter Summary
– Financial institutions bring net suppliers of funds and net demanders together to
help translate the savings of individuals, businesses, and governments into
loans and other types of investments.
– Financial institutions collect the savings of individuals and channel those funds
to borrowers such as businesses and governments. Financial markets provide a
forum in which savers and borrowers can transact business directly.
– In the money market, savers who want a temporary place to deposit funds
where they can earn interest interact with borrowers who have a short-term
need for funds. In contrast, the capital market is the forum in which savers and
borrowers interact on a long-term basis.
– Financial institutions lowered their standards for lending to prospective
homeowners, and institutions also invested heavily in mortgage-backed
securities. When home prices fell and mortgage delinquencies rose, the value of
the mortgage-backed securities held by banks plummeted, causing some banks
to fail and many others to restrict the flow of credit to business.
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Chapter Summary (cont’d)
– The Glass-Steagall Act created the FDIC and imposed a separation between
commercial and investment banks. The Act was designed to limit the risks that
banks could take and to protect depositors. Recently, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
essentially repealed the elements of Glass-Steagall pertaining to the separation of
commercial and investment banks. After the recent financial crisis, much debate has
occurred regarding the proper regulation of large financial institutions.
– The Securities Act of 1933 focuses on regulating the sale of securities in the primary
market, whereas the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 deals with regulations
governing transactions in the secondary market. The 1934 Act also created the
Securities and Exchange Commission, the primary body responsible for enforcing
federal securities laws.
– Corporate income is subject to corporate taxes. Corporate tax rates apply to both
ordinary income (after deduction of allowable expenses) and capital gains. The
average tax rate paid by a corporation ranges from 15 to 35 percent. Corporate
taxpayers can reduce their taxes through certain provisions in the tax code: dividend
income exclusions and tax-deductible expenses. A capital gain occurs when an asset
is sold for more than its initial purchase price; they are added to ordinary corporate
income and taxed at regular corporate tax rates.
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